When
purchasing a PC today, you often see the specification of IDE or EIDE
connectors for interfacing to storage devices. Pure IDE is the AT
Attachment specification (ATA), and EIDE is the term used for AT
Attachment 2 an effort to enhance the speed and capabilities of the
original ATA.
Two vendors, Western Digital Corporation promotes a proposed standard
called EIDE, and Seagate Technologies has proposed "Fast ATA" as
alternatives to the ATA.
Some improvements over the ATA IDE proposed by Western Digital
were:
- increasing the accessable storage capacity beyond 528MB.
- increasing the number of hard drives beyond 2.
- increasing throughput (speed).
- giving the ATA access to devices other than hard drives.
Before you get too excited, the EIDE proposal required a rewritten
BIOS! That is to increase the capacity up to a total capacity of 8.4GB by
changing the logical block Address to a 28-bit address. BIOS, in the old
days, had a 63 sector per track, 1024 tracks, and 255 r/w heads for a
total capacity of 8.4GB; however, the ATA/IDE did not allow addressing of
the total BIOS limitation.
There are other problems relating to EIDE, but as time passed, they
seem to have been overcome, and EIDE drive interfaces are now available
with some systems. Probably, if your BIOS is 1994 or later, it has EIDE.